Antiliar- I was browsing through some of the pages of the book online- it seems that some of the men of honor in and around San Giuseppe Iato were:Antiliar wrote:That's a murky period. Vittorio Coco's book covers the 1930s and mentions some of the bosses during the 1910-20 period, but not all of them. I know the bosses of Corleone. JimmyB might know exactly who the Castellammarese bosses were, but that still leaves a lot of gaps. Anyway, San Giuseppe Jato would have been closest to San Ciparello, Balestrate, Camporeale, Partinico, Terrasini, and Alcamo. Couldn't really tell you who ran those cities.cavita wrote:Good reference material.... do you know who the other bosses were offhand of the various mafia strongholds in Sicily from 1910-1920? That may shed light on the alliances in the U.S. cities and those ever-present connections that seemed to have spanned state linesAntiliar wrote:I would definitely say he was an important person within the Sicilian Mafia before he came to the U.S. There's a whole world of connections that earlier writers missed, like Salvatore Maranzano being the boss of the Trapani province before he emigrated in 1925, or the Morello's connection with Corleone, the Profacis and Villabate, and D'Aquila and the Gambinos with Palermo. I wouldn't date if there's an old case file gathering dust in the archives of Palermo or Rome that concerns Troia and could shed more light to what we already know. Thanks to Professor Salvatore Lupo we now know that there was a rivalry between D'Aquila and Manfredi Mineo in Palermo. So who knows how the events in Rockford, Springfield and Newark related to what was occurring in Sicily. Of course by that time Benito Mussolini was in power, yet Vittorio Coco in his book Relazioni Mafiose shows that the Mafia in Palermo was still active during his rule. You should go through this book because his name is in there:
https://books.google.com/books?id=m9f1K ... ia&f=false
Vincenzo Troia formerly of Madison, Wisconsin
Gaspare Calo, who ended up being underboss of Rockford, originally from Casteldaccia
Filippo Zito, brother of Frank, boss of Springfield and Joe, consigliere of Rockford
Salvatore Immordino, early Rockford member and close ally of the Zitos while he lived in Rockford. He first lived in Frankfort, NY before moving to Madison, Wisconsin and then Rockford.
The first Rockford boss was Antonino Musso who hailed from Partinico and lived in Madison, Wisconsin. To be boss over these men early on I wondered if Musso was a man of honor in Sicily first but then I realized that he immigrated to the U.S. in 1912 when he was only 19 years old. He had a cousin Vincenzo Finazzo in Detroit but had strong ties to St. Louis as well. By 1924 he was in Madison, Wisconsin and was a powerhouse there in the bootlegging business. I can't figure out how Musso lorded over these men when they were older and already established in Sicily before coming to the U.S. Any thoughts?